Spanish Sentence building
Knowing words in isolation is one thing. Getting them in the right order, with the right articles and agreements, is where most learners hit a wall. Sentence building practice is good for exactly that — it puts grammar in context, so instead of memorising a rule in the abstract, you're applying it in a sentence that means something. Fill-in-the-blank exercises feel low-stakes enough to be useful: you can reason through an answer without the panic of real-time speech, but the feedback loop is tight enough that wrong choices don't go unnoticed.
What to expect
- Each exercise shows a partial sentence — one or more words missing — and asks you to complete it.
- Topics are pulled from everyday situations: introductions, directions, transport, shopping, making plans.
- Every sentence has a full translation you can check after you answer.
- The difficulty increases gradually, starting with short A1-level sentences and working toward more complex B2+ constructions.
Common questions
- Is this too advanced for a complete beginner?
- No — it starts at A1, which means very short sentences with basic structures. Subject, verb, object. You don't need to know much going in.
- How is this different from the grammar conjugation practice?
- Grammar practice is about getting one verb form right in isolation. Sentence building puts that verb into a full sentence alongside other words, which makes the grammar feel less abstract and also reinforces vocabulary at the same time.
- Can I use this to study for DELE or DELF exams?
- It's decent preparation for the written sections, particularly the fill-in-the-blank and short production tasks. It won't cover essay writing, but for grammar accuracy and vocabulary in context it's a solid supplement.